*Holyfield vs. Tyson II was named the [[Ring Magazine Event of the Year|Event of the Year]] by [[The Ring Magazine]] for 1997.

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<b>Judges:</b> Jerry Roth, Chuck Giampa, Duane Ford <br>

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*Tyson was rocked in the first round by a right. In the second round, Tyson threw a right as Holyfield was starting to throw a left hook. As Tyson leaned into the punch and Holyfield ducked it, their heads came together and opened a cut over Tyson's right eye. Referee Mills Lane called time and informed ringside officials that the cut was caused by a headbutt. After losing the first two rounds on all three official scorecards, Tyson was doing better in the third, catching Holyfield with a couple of good rights. But in the final minute of the round, while the two were tied up, Tyson bit a chunk out of Holyfield's right ear. Holyfield stepped back and jumped in the air, twirling around. Tyson then walked up behind Holyfield and pushed him into the ropes. Lane stopped the action and deducted two points from Tyson, who told Lane that the damage to Holyfield's ear was caused by a punch. "Bullshit!" Lane replied. When the action resumed, Tyson bit Holyfield's left ear. At the end of the round, when Lane saw the bite mark on Holyfield's left ear, he disqualified Tyson. In a post-fight interview with Jim Gray, Tyson claimed that the headbutts were intentional by Holyfield, and the bites were retaliation.

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*[[Teddy Atlas]], Tyson's former trainer, predicted to a group of reporters the night before the fight that Tyson "will try to get lucky, naturally" but if he can't land a knockout punch early, "he's going to try to disqualify himself, either by elbowing, or throwing a low blow, butting or biting."

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*Holyfield required eight stitches in his right ear. After the fight, an MGM Grand employee located part of Holyfield's ear in the ring, scooped it up with Latex gloves, and took it to Holyfield's locker-room door. "I have something he probably wants," he told the security guard. Holyfield's camp placed it in an ice bucket and hoped surgeons could reattach it, but it apparently was lost during the ambulance ride. "The plastic surgeon and I were digging through the ice pack and couldn't find it," said Tim Hallmark, Holyfield's conditioning coach.

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*On June 30, in a televised statement, Tyson apologized. "I just snapped," he said. "I couldn't tell you why I acted exactly as I did."

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*The [[Nevada State Athletic Commission]] fined Tyson $3 million dollars. By law, they could not fine him more than 10% of his purse. Tyson made $30 million, while Holyfield got $35 million. The commission also revoked Tyson's boxing license, which was reinstated in October 1998.

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*Holyfield vs. Tyson II was, at the time, the highest grossing boxing match in history in all categories. A crowd of 18,187 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena produced a gate of $17,277,000. Domestic pay-per-view buys totaled more than 1.99 million and generated $99,822,000. The fight was shown on closed circuit television at 1,625 locations in the United States and generated $5,959,000. The fight was also seen in 97 foreign countries and foreign sales totaled $21,240,000, which included sponsorships.

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*At the time of the bout, it was estimated by [[Showtime]] that Mike Tyson fights accounted for nearly 25% of all pay-per-view revenue since pay-per-view became popular in the 1980s, although most believe this percentage to be lower. It was the biggest promotion ever for [[Jay Larkin]], who worked for Showtime from 1984 to 2005, rising from junior publicist to senior vice president and executive producer.

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*When Tyson got out of prison, promoter [[Don King]] got him a six-fight deal with the MGM Grand. For his part, King got 618,557 shares of MGM Grand stock. After Tyson's license was revoked, MGM decided to severe it's relationship with Tyson, and MGM Grand controlling owner Kirk Kerkorian bought out King's stake in the hotel and casino for $27.5 million.

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*This was the last Mike Tyson fight promoted by Don King. Tyson sued Don King Productions for $100 million in 1998. They settled out of court in 2004 for $14 million, all of which was paid directly to the U.S. government for unpaid back taxes owed by Tyson.

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Tyson rocked in the first round by a right. Early in the third round Tyson finally gains the initiative before losing control and being disqualified for twice biting Holfield's ear. Tyson claimed he was retaliating for headbutting by Holyfield. Holyfield required plastic surgery to repair the ear. The Nevada State Athletic Commission fined Tyson $3 million dollars and revoked his boxing license (which it reinstated in October 1998).

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[[Image:Tysonholybite.jpg]]

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Declared ''The Ring'' magazine's [[Ring Magazine Event of the Year|"Event of the Year"]].

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[[Image:Tysonholybite.jpg|Tysonholybite.jpg]]

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[[Image:Millsholy.jpg||250px|(AP photo/Mark Terrill)]]

[[Image:Millsholy.jpg||250px|(AP photo/Mark Terrill)]]

[[Image:Holyfield ear.jpg|Holyfield ear.jpg]]

[[Image:Holyfield ear.jpg|Holyfield ear.jpg]]

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[[Category:1997 Bouts|Tyson vs. Holfield]]

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==External Links==

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*[http://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/30/sports/after-biting-tyson-faces-trouble-from-all-corners.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm The New York Times - June 30, 1997]

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*[http://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/01/sports/mike-should-still-be-paid-zero.html The New York Times - July 1, 1997]

Notes

Tyson was rocked in the first round by a right. In the second round, Tyson threw a right as Holyfield was starting to throw a left hook. As Tyson leaned into the punch and Holyfield ducked it, their heads came together and opened a cut over Tyson's right eye. Referee Mills Lane called time and informed ringside officials that the cut was caused by a headbutt. After losing the first two rounds on all three official scorecards, Tyson was doing better in the third, catching Holyfield with a couple of good rights. But in the final minute of the round, while the two were tied up, Tyson bit a chunk out of Holyfield's right ear. Holyfield stepped back and jumped in the air, twirling around. Tyson then walked up behind Holyfield and pushed him into the ropes. Lane stopped the action and deducted two points from Tyson, who told Lane that the damage to Holyfield's ear was caused by a punch. "Bullshit!" Lane replied. When the action resumed, Tyson bit Holyfield's left ear. At the end of the round, when Lane saw the bite mark on Holyfield's left ear, he disqualified Tyson. In a post-fight interview with Jim Gray, Tyson claimed that the headbutts were intentional by Holyfield, and the bites were retaliation.

Teddy Atlas, Tyson's former trainer, predicted to a group of reporters the night before the fight that Tyson "will try to get lucky, naturally" but if he can't land a knockout punch early, "he's going to try to disqualify himself, either by elbowing, or throwing a low blow, butting or biting."

Holyfield required eight stitches in his right ear. After the fight, an MGM Grand employee located part of Holyfield's ear in the ring, scooped it up with Latex gloves, and took it to Holyfield's locker-room door. "I have something he probably wants," he told the security guard. Holyfield's camp placed it in an ice bucket and hoped surgeons could reattach it, but it apparently was lost during the ambulance ride. "The plastic surgeon and I were digging through the ice pack and couldn't find it," said Tim Hallmark, Holyfield's conditioning coach.

On June 30, in a televised statement, Tyson apologized. "I just snapped," he said. "I couldn't tell you why I acted exactly as I did."

The Nevada State Athletic Commission fined Tyson $3 million dollars. By law, they could not fine him more than 10% of his purse. Tyson made $30 million, while Holyfield got $35 million. The commission also revoked Tyson's boxing license, which was reinstated in October 1998.

Holyfield vs. Tyson II was, at the time, the highest grossing boxing match in history in all categories. A crowd of 18,187 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena produced a gate of $17,277,000. Domestic pay-per-view buys totaled more than 1.99 million and generated $99,822,000. The fight was shown on closed circuit television at 1,625 locations in the United States and generated $5,959,000. The fight was also seen in 97 foreign countries and foreign sales totaled $21,240,000, which included sponsorships.

At the time of the bout, it was estimated by Showtime that Mike Tyson fights accounted for nearly 25% of all pay-per-view revenue since pay-per-view became popular in the 1980s, although most believe this percentage to be lower. It was the biggest promotion ever for Jay Larkin, who worked for Showtime from 1984 to 2005, rising from junior publicist to senior vice president and executive producer.

When Tyson got out of prison, promoter Don King got him a six-fight deal with the MGM Grand. For his part, King got 618,557 shares of MGM Grand stock. After Tyson's license was revoked, MGM decided to severe it's relationship with Tyson, and MGM Grand controlling owner Kirk Kerkorian bought out King's stake in the hotel and casino for $27.5 million.

This was the last Mike Tyson fight promoted by Don King. Tyson sued Don King Productions for $100 million in 1998. They settled out of court in 2004 for $14 million, all of which was paid directly to the U.S. government for unpaid back taxes owed by Tyson.